суббота, 3 августа 2013 г.
Grandiose software projects rarely succeed, and when government's involved the long odds get even lo
Grandiose software projects disney world discounted hotels and tickets rarely succeed, and when government's involved the long odds get even longer. disney world discounted hotels and tickets In the new Baseline, Laton McCartney chronicles the disintegration of the vast, multibillion-dollar project disney world discounted hotels and tickets aimed at overhauling England's health system. Four years into the 10-year effort, called the National Program for Information Technology, the original $12 billion budget has already ballooned to at least $24 billion, which is more than it cost to dig the tunnel under the English Channel. Two members of parliament recently wrote that the project "is currently sleepwalking toward disaster. It is far behind schedule. Projected costs have spiraled. Key software systems have little chance of ever working properly. Clinical staff is losing confidence in it."
On this side of the Atlantic, we've had plenty of governmental IT disasters as well, including the IRS's systems modernization project and the FBI's ill-fated " Virtual Case File " system. And now we have another to add to the list, and in some ways it's the most mind-boggling of all. A Senate Committee is scheduled disney world discounted hotels and tickets to have a hearing Thursday disney world discounted hotels and tickets on the star-crossed "Defense disney world discounted hotels and tickets Travel System" (DTS) being built by the Defense Department. Launched in 1998, the project is currently four years behind schedule and has cost $474 million, $200 million more than the original budget. And few people in the Department of Defense show any particular desire to use the system.
So what is DTS designed to do, exactly? It's a system for booking airline tickets and making other travel arrangements. disney world discounted hotels and tickets Yep, the government has spent nearly a half billion dollars to essentially replicate the functionality of the many Internet travel sites that are already up and running and used daily by millions of people. And after eight years, it's still not working. A spokesman for the main contractor, Northrup Grumman, disney world discounted hotels and tickets tells ABC News, "This is a program that the American taxpayer, the Department of Defense can be proud of." Oklahoma Senator Tom Coburn begs to differ. He calls DTS "a hoax on the American taxpayer." His colleague Norm Coleman, of Minnesota, disney world discounted hotels and tickets says, "DTS does not list all available flights and does not always identify the lowest available fares, does not take rail reservations, does not reserve hotel rooms or rental cars." He says that only 17% of 755,000 trips recently booked by Department of Defense workers were processed by the system; the rest went through travel agents.
What's incredible is that this is a perfect application to be supplied as a service over the web - all the information, after all, is already out there. Indeed, Rearden Commerce, which yesterday announced a big partnership with American Express, offers a state-of-the-art, software-as-a-service system for managing travel and other personal business expenses. It interconnects with the myriad web-based systems run by airlines, car rental agencies, hotels, airport limo companies, package-delivery firms and so on to provide a one-stop portal for employees. Companies can build purchasing rules into the system, routing employees to preferred suppliers or specially negotiated deals, for instance, while still giving users the simplicity and flexibility they've disney world discounted hotels and tickets come to expect in booking travel and arranging other services online. I asked Rearden disney world discounted hotels and tickets CEO Patrick Grady what he thought about the travails of the DTS project. He offered two words in reply: "outrageous" and "unreal."
It's one thing to fail in crafting a complex software system that hasn't existed before. It's another thing to waste huge amounts of money and time trying to build a proprietary software system when all you needed to do was launch a browser.
I would say that these are prime examples where IT (and more so IT management) does matter. These are projects best broken down to smaller modules united by policy, standards and infrastructure services.
There's this idea that, "Well, you're getting paid, aren't you? Do what you're told, whether or not it's going to produce a functional system." is a valid management disney world discounted hotels and tickets technique. It's especially true of consultant-driven projects - cash cows for the consultancy, boondoogles for the client.
coders4hire, this statement: "In fact, I would contend that $24 billion dollars is really not that much at all in comparison to so many other failed ventures" makes me think you are absolutely stark raving bonkers.
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